Pro athletes getting caught using steroids

Notice how Brandon Stokley takes a sharp right turn just before he reaches the goal line, in order to let time expire before he enters the end zone? Apparently, he learned that move from playing Madden . "It definitely is [from Madden ]," Stokley told WIRED . "I think everybody who's played those games has done that [move]." Stokley estimated he'd done the exact same thing in Madden "probably hundreds of times" before he got the opportunity to do it for real. The play demonstrates tremendous football IQ and clock management skills. Had Stokley just sprinted straight into the end zone, the Bengals may have pulled off a magical kick return and spoiled his sensational play. Thank heavens for Madden .

During his college days and beyond, John found his niche in the sport of open water swimming. Aside from working for 10 years on the Atlantic City Beach Patrol, making numerous rescues, and winning numerous lifeguard races, he also had amazing success at the National and International levels. John was a 5-time US National champion in distances ranging from 10K up to 25K. He was a 7-time National team member and has competed at a wide variety of races including Nationals, Olympic trials, Pan Ams, Pan Pacs, World Cups, and World Championships. He has been competing at local open water races since 1990, attended his first Open Water Nationals in 1997, and most recently represented the USA in the 25K at World Championships in 2008. There were many swimmers out there with more raw speed in the pool, but very few could match his experience, endurance, tactics, and innate sense of finding the fastest, most efficient way to finish an open water race. From short races to marathons, flat lake swims to rough ocean or turbulent river swims, John Kenny is the most experienced open water swimmer in the United States, if not the world. Other coaches in the triathlon realm claiming to be "open water experts" do not come close.